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By Laura Herberg, Bridge Michigan
The Great Lakes News Collaborative includes Bridge Michigan; Circle of Blue; Great Lakes Now at Detroit PBS; Michigan Public, Michigan’s NPR News Leader; and The Narwhal who work together to bring audiences news and information about the impact of climate change, pollution, and aging infrastructure on the Great Lakes and drinking water. This independent journalism is supported by the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation. Find all the work HERE.
Elliot Hubbard and his wife own a small hobby farm in Michigan’s Thumb region where Hubbard said “it’s not uncommon to see 30 to 40 does in our fields and a handful of bucks.”
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources doesn’t know the ratio of does to bucks in the state’s white-tailed deer herd, but officials suspect females outnumber males.
Many people believe that’s because Michigan hunters prefer to kill bucks because state policy told them to do so for decades. As a result, the state’s herd is likely unbalanced, which some worry hurts the population and the quality of hunting because it means fewer big bucks left to target.
To try to reverse that trend, advocates have since the 1990s tried to get state regulators to limit hunters to one buck per huntingseason, but had been told it was nearly impossible because of state legislation. Countless hours of research and advocacy proved fruitless for years, even as someother states with one buck rules saw more balanced kills and balanced herds.
This year, however, the DNR reversed course and recommended the Michigan Natural Resources commission enact a one buck rule that also puts doe tags at the forefront.
A vote could happen as soon as Wednesday, which some hunters feel would be historic for the state.
In reality, today’s issues with the herd likely exist because a version of the rule first passed about 100 years ago.
After logging, development, fires and a period of unregulated commercial venison sales took its toll on Michigan’s deer herd, the state passed a law in 1921 requiring hunters to kill just one deer — and it had to be a buck.
“It is expected this provision will re-populate the forest of Michigan with deer,” an article published in the St. Joseph Herald-Press said at the time.
“They didn’t want to harvest any does because, in their mind, does make the babies,” explained Baraga County hunter Jordan Hoover, who grew up with a father involved in deer conservation. “So, if we don’t take any does, we’ll have more deer.”
In practice, the “one buck only” policy appears to have not only helped the deer population grow in Michigan but also affected sex ratios and the psyche of hunters.
By the 1930s, Michigan reported 2.4 does for every buck statewide, though many hunters believed the imbalance was even greater. In the 1940s, the state began holding antlerless deer seasons to control growing deer populations that were damaging farms. By 1965, hunters could use an archery license to take a deer of either sex, though many hunters still sought that trophy buck.
“As the herd grew, the mentality didn’t evolve with the changes of the environment and the population as a whole,” said Todd Johnson, the director of policy and advocacy for the state council of the National Deer Association in Michigan.
Buck was still king. In fact, starting in 1977, hunters could shoot two bucks in one year if they took one with a firearm and another with a bow. Then the bag limit doubled to four in 1986.
Some hunters started to feel that encouraging antlerless deer harvests and limiting hunters to one buck could increase the health of the herd and grow the number of big bucks in the future by letting more young bucks mature.
In 1998, the combination license was created and hunters were limited to two buck tags.
“Conscientious hunters everywhere rejoiced,” read an article in the Lansing State Journal published that year.
Hoover, the Baraga County hunter, said it was around that time when his father, David Hoover, “started standing on the gas pedal” in lobbying for a one buck rule.
The younger Hoover recalled his dad driving back and forth between their home in Calumet and Lansing.
“And just the hundreds if not thousands of hours that I saw him put into studies, sitting at his desk, the countless phone calls, the emails, pouring over all the data,” he said. “It made a big impression on me.”
By the early 2000s, the idea of a one buck rule seemed at a fever pitch. In 2005, one sportswriter opened a story this way: “State wildlife officials say they’re hearing a mantra about deer hunting across the state: one buck, one buck, one buck.”
But the DNR said that a one buck rule couldn’t be implemented without new legislation. Officials also worried a one buck rule would likely result in the loss of more than $5 million for the department because second buck tags could not be purchased.
In 2007, the Natural Resources Commission looked at two proposals for a one buck rule, but both were unanimously opposed, with commissioners citing preliminarysurveys showing “a strong majority of hunters” were not interested in being limited to one buck.
Today’s hunters are divided. In 2020, a DNR survey found nearly half of them — 48% — would support limiting the combination license to allow for only one antlered deer to be killed.
Meanwhile, a highly vocal contingent has emerged to push the one buck rule. They swap studies in Facebook groups, talk on podcasts and are involved in advisory groups created by the DNR.
They point to other Midwestern states, such as Ohio and Pennsylvania, that have had a one buck rule for more than a hundred years and have more balanced hunts.
In 2025, Ohio hunters reported killing 1.42 antlerless deer for every antlered deer. In Pennsylvania, hunters reported killing 1.73 antlerless deer for every antlered deer. In Michigan, hunters reported killing 0.92 antlerless deer for every one antlered deer.
“In this state, we’re buck-centric in the fact that people just want to shoot their buck,” said Lincoln Rohn, a hunter based in Comstock Park. “A lot of them don’t care how big it is, and they want to shoot two of them.”
Rohn, Hoover, Hubbard, Hubbard’s wife, Rashel, and others had been pushing for the one buck rule but running into similar obstacles as past advocates.
“We’ve always been told that we could not do one buck,” said Rohn. “We were told, because the Legislature needed a combination license, that we could not do it. It had to be two bucks.”
But the advocates noted the law called for a combination license allowing for two deer, but didn’t say two bucks. At their urging, the DNR asked for a legal review and determined the advocates were right. That allowed the department to support a one buck rule.
“This change is an overdue correction due to the evolution of the deer herd in Michigan,” Johnson, of the National Deer Association Michigan, said. “We’re at a point where we need to manage the herd for sustainable health.”
The post Michigan created a buck-centric culture regulators now want to change appeared first on Great Lakes Now.
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Consumers Energy is seeking approval to drill two deep injection wells at a coal plant next to Lake Michigan in Ottawa County, Michigan, to dispose of coal ash wastewater and other liquids generated during site cleanup. Read the full story by MLive.
Great Lakes Commission
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Pink salmon were accidentally introduced to the Great Lakes in the 1950s and have since spread to all five lakes. Researchers are studying their adaptability to predict how they might impact Arctic and North Atlantic ecosystems. Read the full story by People.
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Water levels on lakes Michigan, Huron, Superior and St. Clair are forecast to remain above last year’s levels through the boating season after a spring marked by heavy snowmelt and unusually wet conditions. Read the full story by The Detroit News.
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As spring rain and snowmelt continue to raise water levels across the Great Lakes region, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says it is prepared to support communities along Lake Ontario facing potential flooding concerns. Read the full story by the Finger Lakes Daily News.
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After it is deployed later this month, a new weather buoy in Lake Erie off the shore of Buffalo, New York, will measure wind speed, air temperature, wave height, water temperature and lots of other data. Read the full story by The Buffalo News.
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The Soo Locks are a system of parallel locks in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, that allow ships to travel between lakes Superior and Huron by bypassing the fast-moving rapids of the Saint Marys River. Here’s the best time for visiting and viewing the locks in action. Read the full story by Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
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The life cycle of the mayfly is so vital to the aquatic ecosystem — especially in northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan — that it is one of the main indicators of freshwater health. Read the full story by the Toledo Blade.
Great Lakes Commission
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A setback occurred during the attempted removal of the G Tug Hawaii sunk in Lake Erie. Spectators and crews watched the boat detach from the 272-foot crane, bounce off the wall of the dock, and resubmerge into the lake. Read the full story by the Erie Times-News.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260511-tugboat-fell
It’s the unofficial start to summer at the McKinley Marina, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and the staff lifted dozens of boats into Lake Michigan for Big Boat Day. Read the full story by WISN-TV – Milwaukee, WI.
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